Trump ballroom soars to $600M, with taxpayers on hook for half: Report – USA Today

0
wp-header-logo-2072.png

WASHINGTON — Construction of Donald Trump’s White House ballroom is projected to cost $600 million, significantly more than the president has previously said, with taxpayers covering more than half that amount, according to a new report from the Washington Post, which cited internal government documents.
Trump has repeatedly said the ballroom under construction on the East Wing of the White House would cost $400 million, up from $200 million he estimated when the project was first announced in July 2025. From the outset, the president has said he will use private donations to cover the costs.
But Clark Construction, the contractor hired for the ballroom, informed the White House on March 5 that the project had increased to $600 million, according to a project summary cited obtained by the Post, with $293 million coming from “private sources.” Clark identified sources funded by taxpayers to cover the remaining costs: $155 million from the Secret Service, $149 million from the White House Military Office and $3 million from the Executive Residence.
The White House has argued that funding related to security ‒ including a hospital underneath the ballroom and a rooftop drone center ‒ is separate from the ballroom project.
In response to the explosive report, the White House said Trump remains committed to spend $400 million in private funds on the ballroom. “President Trump and generous American patriots are funding the ballroom to the tune of approximately $400 million, which will be a secure and appropriate venue for Presidents for generations to come,” White House spokesman Davis Ingle said.
Ingle pointed to the June arrests of five suspects in what the FBI alleged was a plot to attack Trump’s Ultimate Fighting Championship event as an example of why a larger, more secure ballroom is needed.
“The events over the weekend and the foiled attempted attack on the historic UFC Freedom 250 event at the White House proves exactly why the East Wing Modernization Project is severely needed for large scale events, which include drone proof structures and drone ports among other critical security enhancements,” Ingle said.
Trump, in March 31 remarks to reporters in the Oval Office, called the White House ballroom project “a donation” from private companies. “This is taxpayer-free. We have no taxpayer putting up 10 cents,” the president said.
But the Post, citing the project summaries from Clark Construction, as well as invoice logs and emails, found tens of millions of dollars in public funds have already gone toward the project, with taxpayer money tapped from the beginning.
That includes $3.6 million of Secret Service money for site preparation before demolition of the East Wing, according to emails from administration officials. A separate pool of $1.6 million in Secret Service funds was budgeted for the demolition.
Democrats in Congress seized on the report. “How many times did Trump say zero taxpayer dollars would go to his gilded ballroom?” Democratic House Whip Katherine Clark, D-Massachusetts, said in a post on X. “He lied. Every time. But still not a dime to help lower costs for families.”
In May, Senate Republicans stripped a proposed $1 billion the White House wanted for security tied to the ballroom from a larger reconciliation bill that boosted border and immigration enforcement. That vote, however, did not slow down work at the ballroom construction site, where two cranes and many workers can be seen daily.
Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll in October 2025 found 56% of Americans opposed the East Wing’s demolition and ballroom project ‒ including 45% who said they “strongly oppose” it. Democrats have tried to turn the ballroom into a campaign issue in the 2026 midterm elections, arguing Trump is fixated on a vanity project while Americans struggle with high prices.
Trump has argued the 90,000 square-foot ballroom is needed to hold large events that currently have to be confined to the much smaller White House East Room or outdoors on the South Lawn. Following the April 24 shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, Trump and White House officials said the ballroom is crucial for the president’s safety to hold large events.
A federal judge in March halted above-ground construction of the ballroom in a case brought by historic preservationists seeking to block the project. The order was later unblocked by a federal appeals court while it considers the case. The U.S. Court of Appeals has yet to issue on the Trump administration’s appeal of the lower court’s decision.
Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison.

source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *